JUNE 26. ] THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 41i 
beret ite SOCIETY OF LONDON. South Pole. Both the Erebus and Terror had expe- | condition of the parts is fixed beyon! ge, 
The La! st. Ex ee ea ae. Toes ba tees. the 10th of then the centre on nei lengthens and pombe a tuft of 
Jeux; subjects f fox ® yin mist be at this office on Friday the vit to > Rerguele’s s Island; and the sails prepared by | leaves; ai 
Eee es ates veill b sr eh pL go cco ss 2 Beep ae | Sr. We one ioe pees py por sgl leaves young Roses will spring up, just as the first 
te ire it this Office, } ice.5s..each; or at the Garden in the and ev as good as new. is officer | Rose sprang from among leaves of a common kind. 
apernoee of al nF ohies Hose A Peek he JF pada ( “ = flog) wats >that the sails, steeped in oride This sort: of Pr ges is is most common in warm 
21, Rigent sweet the i 
and is 
——— canvas, iad for bitigh aie much fellas pial citement which, . such en ce young flowers are 
Tie The Garvences Chronicte, where there i is muc xposed to occurs in warm, ane autumns, 
ee wore three main top- whet Be stich ping as Potentillas will have every flower 
SATURDAY, JUNE 26; 1841. prot t sails out for one = te other canvas, which | transformed, more or less completely, into leaves. In- 
was used a8 a fore to “pally Oe ; and when they ar - | stances of the kind may, however, always be found, 
pa A mater! ith, Felton. Web oie fel ae Dereham Ae — be the season what it ree ay 5 and therefor 
june Suh, Highgate July ist, Beulah Spa. July 24, Markee Dravton, This s ent ly rauieis ong + | nasal 
GanpENeERrs will obse: Consideri avy of | warm weather : it is pater in some instances, and 
tisement for an intliget Young than to gcse to the ptotection of canvas, and its great value to farm- | to some exten hich 
India ; and they collec t the ip chars “ 9 dis and others, such facts cannot be too generally ppm pie, that is, abounding Ag ard in 
j ade lL am: | 
Ps = ’ o! 
that a road is row fairly open to situations of | .. We n Fla from the Secretary of the Not, Supposing such to be the cause, it is evident that, 
‘i i 5 to some extent, the mischief is beyond remedy; but 
members that body, disputin: the full propriety of | as; + ane f soda, sul 
sie of the Fle laid nape Age ce of the phate of soda, carbonate of "amm onia, and even mu- 
been very much the practice in those countries, 
especially in India, to look to the ranks of European 
garden that is to say, for men ho, having Beh the eubject of complainthave long been foun ound neces- | plants, SE in with dabertak ascertaining experimentally whe- 
Peg poe the urers, and knowing how to one oie ees Sieianiee aiiee Weeks ther the application of these” i i 
" lr nd di 2 themsel - : ; eget s hich the Rose ould not have the effect of 
fan ee dr at home, | lowed to take a prize,” aid that “a damaged flower checking the evil complained of. 
The rules 
have been glad to enlist to escape worse consequences. guard agninss the sn admittance of flowers unworthy of| ON THE SELECTION OF cu CUTTINGS FOR 
Bo oS baer sey anes gry etree exhibition rere ti 
sued ; for sich men, probably, knew nothing of gar- all menabers i exhibitors - i Ay Bn aed Pen | > Permits WS beniiel of gardening anes possesses mi 
dening interest to those who are en; in such pursuits rot 
en it 
this art ations, lace " aré 
belo 5 4 wake vias : i ; rdener are enabled 
who can only rake, and dig atid hoe, isno more a gar- | Principles, not to meet individual cases. The writer ete Reha Be gee ese 
dener than he who fancies a blue apron tied round his | 2&** aed oy “that colour should take precedence of seryalh ret to all it presents ous of of the uae reaatitat 
z llible sigh 6f skill: such people are form.” This is in direct opposition to the rules | ustrations of the way in which n may be made sub- 
tillers of the _ and better tillers than brs are may | ¢Stablished among florists in this part of the king: | servient to the purposes of man. 
be found among the ee grey colon dom, who consider that form is the first essential pro- | _ A plant has been not inaptly compared to a colony of 
Hie only r isis oe esthe ar Sons DS who | perty that all forist’s fowets should pistes, der tks esta. tet Rae of iehich pottenies cuucee eee 
not only knows lbw Ze "as ing in his own place, | Want of which no colour can compensate. rm isa | <i}, ght teelrdey F organe Whted’ WE ME its support. 
but elsewhere, and why success attends his practice, quality that can be determined with ee A knowledge of what those circumstances are are, and how | 
i = es precision, and is therefore a more certain criterion ; they out be applied, emb: races the whole system of 
uch a 
«4B fda wer the | Whereas colour i or less beautiful to various prop pagation ; and although persons “may by chance strike 
oh 
dog-days in December, as in the Southein hemisphere, | °TS85 i vision, and depends much upon the caprice | ! to failin many cases, and far the greater number 
or a climate where our cold éeason of i atebetivee: taste ; and it would be m igh em a watt a8 eertiity hot moto ey We as frequently 
ner Pele Sears that property the first consideration upon which told that there are many excellent dzators who do not 
by h ¥itok bol i scarcely two perme would ‘ead tree a a ee they do understand 
. Tee at Y ’ an practice daily, although they may 
adapt ced one circumstances, std “hit his | Fules of the Society were no doubt formed upon ibe be WON to expat o explain them atiactrily. Bh Hicks in- 
times and modes of cultivation, and to change his dividuals acquire this knowledge b y long experience. They 
crops to suit them. In order i SEqUKG this rower in the letter that scold july Babee is doe he hoe Tomer dr and the same suc- 
he must study with the utmost attention the works of | Proposed alterations, arta hae 
iodern cia Fs bn aH piiysiclogy, =? make | Severan of our correspondents have begged for | ch fondamentt tela will find ete of his thie 
himself master of everyt is known | ning nformation concerni catise of their Roses thi uiring tl sl 2 
the way in which plants live, feed, grow, breathe, di- sr te Sic —e : he ee | ong ae 4 ths Comaeechacit Re hd BUS os 
pees Ae Re ae thus 
and have their being. Then, combining this i -_ : study the principles of the art. 
owledy irith th sa | _ More t el correspondent “Eley, then, contains ti ine (ogee of many hundred 
dh bo SSjulte datiug the jetiod OF his learnitig the ; : fr “tists oh iets ete taihnd tk bee 
artof Horticulture, he becomes mes a gardener properly so : ‘ughly organised seeds a 
Hest Pare it do not copie Beep mek wind } Quisite in inducing them to form independent ogi: 
called, an ; with ad- ny : Bsnng fidilt teed 1s a iiaturi tp rare 
them i an artificial on the 
Sant a Or tw and time and ead & 
ere thrown hap as Sotonest ines ate gos sre 
: cis t,t and 
" remap r = y ia 
and therefore you re most rae 
y the truth of M th 
: : + sad ch : € c ts, by having your suttings gs and the 
ig au gies bey ne 1 the leaves plait which they were oe to thro ay abc out: 
| that) their peculiar aspect of ‘floral or- Bete tie, On the other hand, wt : 
cd, | gans. eooears seers and : shoots are form= 
‘Mel a 
Browing. 
2 da bs yge mending to the circumference of thé 
, they 0 of; 
forming this s operation ; and oy part wl bie 
the ma- | roots for the siipport ® thi 
er- | cuttings should tag ee taken 
ci, 
| ive nok @ 
